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The Daily Dispatch: January 25, 1864., [Electronic resource], The European Exodus. (search)
The European Exodus.
--As we have stated, the number of emigrants who arrived at New York last year was 155,223--which is more than double the number of the year preceding.
We get from a Washington letter, dated 23d ult. in the New York Journal of Commerce, the following particulars of this vast tide of humanity setting towards America.
The statement is for the eleven months of 1863, omitting December, and is copied from the official records at the Yankee capital:
From Ireland86,691
From Germany32,801
From England16,893
From Denmark1,567
From Switzerland1,078
From France1,195
From Wales1,083
From Scotland1,664
From Sweden1,359
From Italy405
From Holland379
From Belgium456
From West Indies242
From Spain152
Various others374
Total146,519
It is difficult for a plain man to understand why the emigration has been more than doubled within the twelvemonth, without assuming that it is stimulated by the Yankee Government.
The Daily Dispatch: March 29, 1864., [Electronic resource], The News yesterday. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: May 27, 1864., [Electronic resource], Losses in Alexander 's battalion light Artilliery (search)
The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1864., [Electronic resource], The War news. (search)
Horrible Slaughter in Japan--Six Hundred Murdered in cold blood.
--We have received, via Holland, a letter from Japan three days later than the news already published.
It has been already stated that, the Prince of Nagato having refused to pay the war indemnity stipulated in the treaty of peace signed by him, a judgment of the criminal tribunal of Yeddo had decided that his two palaces should be razed to the ground and his servants put to death.--We learn that this singular and sanguinary sentence was approved of by the Mikado and by the Talcoum, the spiritual and temporal sovereigns of Japan, and that the number of servants killed in execution of it was four hundred and twenty men and two hundred and fifteen women and children.
The Prince, on learning the facts, was deeply concerned, and sent to the capital his First Minister on board the English corvette Barrossa, which was placed at his disposal by Vice-Admiral Kuper.
The Minister, on arriving at Yeddo, waited upon the rep
The Daily Dispatch: December 21, 1865., [Electronic resource], Tried for Shooting his step-mother. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: December 30, 1865., [Electronic resource], Southern Baptist Convention . (search)